25 février 2026
Gigi Hill, Alice Matthews and Charlie Adams share stand-out biopharma deals from the last quarter of 2025. Themes for the quarter include continued interest in in-licencing assets from Chinese biotechs, a renewed focus on immune-mediated diseases, and further investment in new modalities for treatment of obesity and associated cardiometabolic conditions.
Takeda Pharmaceutical entered into a landmark global oncology licensing and collaboration agreement with Innovent Biologics for three solid tumor drug candidates. This reflects the accelerating trend of global big pharma selectively in-licensing assets from Chinese biotech innovators.
The deal grants Takeda exclusive rights outside of the US and Greater China (outside Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) to the immuno-oncology drug candidate IBI363 and the antibody-drug conjugate IBI343, which are investigational medicines being studied in Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials, respectively. The deal also grants an exclusive option to license IBI3001, another antibody-drug conjugate currently in Phase 1 trials.
Takeda paid Innovent US$1.2 billion upfront, including a US$100 million equity investment at a 20% premium to its current trading price on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong. Innovent is eligible for up to US$10.2 billion in clinical, regulatory and sales milestones across the three candidates, bringing the total potential deal value to US$11.4 billion.
Under co-development terms for the IBI363, Takeda and Innovent will share global development costs on a 60/40 split (Takeda/Innovent) and likewise share profits and losses 60/40 in the US. Takeda will lead US co-commercialisation of IBI363 with Innovent and will have the exclusive right to commercialise IBI363 outside of the US and Greater China. Takeda will also develop, manufacture and commercialise IBI343 worldwide, outside of Greater China. The cost/profit share structure demonstrates a move towards deeper collaborative economics, rather than simple fixed royalties. Innovent will also receive sales-based royalties on commercial sales outside Greater China for both IBI363 and IBI343, except with respect to IBI363 in the US. If Takeda exercises the option for IBI3001, Innovent will be eligible for an option exercise fee and additional potential milestone and royalty payments.
The deal indicates a sustained focus on bispecific and ADC modalities as the future backbone of treatment for solid tumors, a key trend that emerged from the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference 2026 – see our coverage of this here.
Finally, the race for the next generation of treatments for cardiometabolic diseases is hot with established players Novo and Lilly continuing to innovate, and new players vying for market share. Zealand Pharma and Shanghai-based OTR Therapeutics have entered into a collaboration and licence agreement for the discovery and development of novel oral small-molecule therapeutics for metabolic diseases using OTR's small-molecule platform. Zealand will assume clinical development, regulatory submissions, and global commercialisation responsibilities, while OTR will conduct discovery and preclinical activities using its proprietary R&D platform. Zealand will provide an upfront payment of approximately US$20 million, with the potential to increase to US$30 million, which reflects the discovery stage of the deal. OTR is also eligible for up to US$2.5 billion in milestone payments, with a majority representing commercial milestones, plus tiered single-digit royalties on worldwide net sales.
par Alison Dennis et Alice Matthews
par Charlie Adams et Adrian Toutoungi